Fwd: [New Post] Why I Like to Fight with My Wife


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From: UnTangled <drkellyflanagan@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Jul 22, 2015 at 6:04 AM
Subject: [New Post] Why I Like to Fight with My Wife
To: Bill <billcoffin68@gmail.com>


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Why I Like to Fight with My Wife

By Dr. Kelly Flanagan on Jul 22, 2015 03:00 am
Read this post on DrKellyFlanagan.com 

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A healthy marriage should look a lot like the Stanley Cup Finals. This is what I mean by that…

marital conflict

Photo Credit: clydeorama via Compfight cc

Last month, as my oldest son and I watched the Chicago Blackhawks win game seven of the Stanley Cup Finals, he pointed out something a little startling during the post-game on-ice celebration. In the 1990s, when it was the Bulls bringing championships to Chicago, at the final buzzer, their defeated opponent would immediately sprint for the locker room, hiding from the victors and their joy.

But last month, the defeated Tampa Bay Lightning did no such thing.

They waited patiently, for many minutes, as the Blackhawks celebrated together. Then, both sets of men lined up, as they’ve been doing since they were little boys, and they slowly moved past each other, giving handshakes and hugs and warm words of affirmation.

Although the teams had been in conflict for seven very intense games, there was a palpable sense of unity, as if both teams were part of something bigger than a contest, part of a great tradition called hockey, part of a mutual admiration for each other and a mutual respect for a game they are all indebted to. As I watched, I knew the post-game handshake was revealing something essential about conflict:

Conflict isn’t meant to be won; it’s meant to make us one.

Don’t Do Away With Conflict; Do Away With This

My goal as a marital therapist is not to help couples stop fighting. Conflict itself isn’t toxic to relationships. The elephant in the room is. The unspoken thing. The thing we avoid because we think the thing to avoid is conflict. Conflict is essential to relationships, and it’s essential to marriage.

My goal as a marital therapist is to help couples fight without ego.

Because it is the ego within our conflict that makes it destructive rather than redemptive, wounding instead of healing, brutal instead of beautiful. The ego is the presence within us that says the other side is always wrong, losing is always bad, and we must win at all costs. It’s what makes it hard for me to admit I’ve made a mistake. It’s why I bristle at legitimate criticism.

It makes conflict a minefield for my opponent, er, wife.

For years, I didn’t know conflict could happen without ego, so I assumed the only sane thing to do was to avoid conflict altogether. I’m not alone. The majority of couples I see in therapy don’t come in because they’ve been fighting like cats and dogs. They come in because they’ve been fighting like ships in the night, which is to say, not at all, passing by each other in silence, never addressing the real differences and divisions in their relationship.

But once the ego dissolves a bit and conflict is waged in the language of our lovely souls, you realize conflict is essential to intimacy and harmony and the very fiber of caring and commitment and community. Which is why, now, I tell couples if you want to save your marriage, don’t silence your conflict, silence your ego.

Leave Us In Peace to Fight

There’s an ancient Jewish parable that goes something like this:

Two rabbis have been arguing over the same verse in the Torah for more than two decades. Every afternoon, they retire to a nearby park and resume the debate. Finally, one afternoon, God becomes so annoyed by the endless discussion that he parts the clouds and a great booming voice declares from the sky, “I will tell you what the verse means.” The rabbis look at each other and then turn toward the voice, thundering back in unison, “Why would you end our conversation? Leave us in peace to debate it!” The clouds close and God returns to the heavens, pleased, I think, that the rabbis have embraced the true purpose of conflict.

Conflict need not drive us apart; in fact, it is meant to bring us together.

When Warring Becomes One-ing

Somewhere at the center of each of us is a soul that doesn’t fight fair.

It fights even better than fair.

It fights with a fierce love. Like two rabbis, it goes to the park every afternoon for conflict that feels more like communion. Like two hockey teams, it lines up at the end of the contest for handshakes and hugs. It fights with its arms so wide open it makes space for all people to come together. If it fights for anything, it’s to make the world a more beautiful place.

Conflict in marriage will never disappear. Nor should it. But extract the ego from it, and you are left with two people, dedicating their lives to wrestling out this one fleeting existence together. And then, at the end of the day, lining up for healing hugs and warm words. This might even be the purpose of marriage: a training ground for fighting with our souls rather than our egos.

In this sense, the world desperately needs the institution of marriage.

The Jewish word for peace is shalom. It means wholeness and harmony. But shalom is not what happens when conflict is finally settled; shalom is what happens in the midst of conflict, when egos fade and the struggle becomes something that forms two into one. Shalom is what happens when our warring becomes a kind of one-ing. In our marriages. And in our world.

That’s why marriage should look like the Stanley Cup Finals.

And that’s why I like to fight with my wife.

You can leave a comment by clicking here.

—————

Next Post: Dear Parent, Cut Yourself Some Slack

Free eBook: My eBook, The Marriage Manifesto: Turning Your World Upside Down, is available free to new blog subscribers. If you are not yet a subscriber, you can click here to subscribe, and your confirmation e-mail will include a link to download the eBook. Or, the book is also now available for Kindle and Nook

Disclaimer: My writings represent a combination of my own personal opinions and my professional experiences, but they do not reflect professional advice. Interaction with me via the blog does not constitute a professional therapeutic relationship. For professional and customized advice, you should seek the services of a counselor who can dedicate the hours necessary to become more intimately familiar with your specific situation. I do not assume liability for any portion or content of material on the blog and accept no liability for damage or injury resulting from your decision to interact with the website.


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Fwd: Tip of the Month - Your Third Ear l July 2015


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: The Family Institute at Northwestern University <tips@family-institute.org>
Date: Wed, Jul 22, 2015 at 10:43 AM
Subject: Tip of the Month - Your Third Ear l July 2015
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com



JULY 2015

Your Third Ear

 

You're at a party. Alcohol is flowing. After a half-hour chatting with others, you spot your partner across the room and meander over. Almost instantly, she complains that you've abandoned her. Her tone is surprisingly harsh. Do you hear the likely sound of alcohol influencing what she's saying, and making it impossible -- you know this from experience -- to have a productive conversation?

 

You're fixing dinner when your partner comes home. Immediately you sense his tenseness. Your greeting receives a short, curt reply. He asks if you've brought in the mail, then quickly turns away. Do you hear the likely sound of a rough day, or maybe bad commute traffic, coloring his words and tone?

 

The two of you are debating a decision that needs resolution by the end of the week. The conversation has deteriorated; you're both frustrated and tired. Your partner erupts with hurtful words of criticism and anger. Do you hear the sound of her emotional brain hijacking her logical brain? (see Two Brains)

 

We all have a Third Ear, but we don't always use it. The Third Ear hears beyond the surface words to a spouse's underlying mood or emotions. With our Third Ear we're like an audience listening while staying in our seats, never climbing onto the stage to join the drama. While hearing something potentially button-pushing, the Third Ear's signal reminds us to refrain from taking the bait ... and to aim for Being Smart instead of Being Right (see Right Versus Smart).

 

Here's what listening with the Third Ear might lead us to say in the examples above:

  1. Let's talk about this in the morning. For now, I'll stay by your side.
  2. Do I detect difficult feelings right now? Talk to me, tell me what's going on.
  3. We're both worked up right now. Let's take a break and continue the conversation after we've calmed down.

To listen with our Third Ear, we need to control our own emotional reactivity, our tendency to get quickly hooked by our partner's words or tone. That can only be done by moving slowly, as it takes the Third Ear -- compared to our customary hearing -- a bit more time to "hear" what's going on. In the next Couples Tip of the Month, we'll tackle the question of how to slow ourselves down.

 
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Fwd: Day 203 - What are the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit? // What are the fruits of the Holy Spirit?

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Catechism in a Year" <mail@flocknote.com>
Date: Jul 22, 2015 7:37 AM
Subject: Day 203 - What are the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit? // What are the fruits of the Holy Spirit?
To: "Bill Coffin" <billcoffin68@gmail.com>
Cc:

What are the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit? The seven gifts of the Holy Spirit are wisdom, understanding, counsel, fortitude, knowledge, piety, and fear of the Lord. With these the Holy Spirit "endows" Christians, in other...
 
     
Catechism in a Year   Catechism in a Year
   
 
 
 
 

What are the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit?

The seven gifts of the Holy Spirit are wisdom, understanding, counsel, fortitude, knowledge, piety, and fear of the Lord. With these the Holy Spirit "endows" Christians, in other words, he grants them particular powers that go beyond their natural aptitudes and gives them the opportunity to become God's special instruments in this world.

We read in one of Paul's letters: "To one is given through the Spirit the utterance of wisdom, and to another the utterance of knowledge according to the same Spirit, to another faith by the same Spirit, to another gifts of healing by the one Spirit, to another the working of miracles, to another prophecy, to another the ability to distinguish between spirits, to another various kinds of tongues, to another the interpretation of tongues" (1 Cor 12:8-10).


What are the fruits of the Holy Spirit?

The fruits of the Holy Spirit are charity, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, generosity, gentleness, faithfulness, modesty, self-control, and chastity (Gal 5:22-23).

In the "fruits of the Holy Spirit" the world can see what becomes of people who let themselves be adopted, led, and completely formed by God. The fruits of the Holy Spirit show that God really plays a role in the life of Christians. (YOUCAT questions 310-311)


Dig Deeper: CCC section (1830-1832) and other references here.


 
Discover how the Holy Spirit wants to work in your life! Learn the gifts and the fruits of the Spirit, plus much more, in this 4-CD set from Dr. Scott Hahn.

Receive the Spirit like never before and unleash his power in your life today! Pick up The New Pentecost CD set or get your copy on MP3.
Discover how the Holy Spirit wants to work in your life! Learn the gifts and the fruits of the Spirit, plus much more, in this 4-CD set from Dr. Scott Hahn.

Receive the Spirit like never before and unleash his power in your life today! Pick up The New Pentecost CD set or get your copy on MP3.
 




Would you like more information about this project, or do you need help? Click here for some FAQs about our Study Programs.
 
 
 
 
 
  Sent by Denise Fath
  Add a comment
 
 
   
   

Fwd: Strengthen Marriage With This Expert Advice


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Melissa Foley <mfoley@ipsciences.edu>
Date: Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 8:05 AM
Subject: Strengthen Marriage With This Expert Advice
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com


Take Practical Steps to Heal Marriage!


Watch a Recording of Our Latest Webinar on Marriage!

 

Dear Bill,

On July 7, nearly 1,000 Catholics gathered for an online webinar on marriage with expert panelists, including

  • Fr. Charles Sikorsky - President of IPS
  • Dr. Greg Bottaro - IPS alumnus serving as a Clinician
  • Steve Bollman - host of "The Choice Wine" marriage enrichment program
  • Fr. Sean Kilcawley - family and marriage counseling for the Diocese of Lincoln, NE
  • Anna Mitchell - Son Rise Morning Show

Panelists explored the root of many challenges married people face today as well as tips for strengthening your marriage or the marriages of people you minister to.  

You won't want to miss the guidance of our expert panelists as well as the questions from our webinar participants. Watch the recording today!

Count on my prayers!

God bless,

Melissa Foley
Enrollment Specialist
888-540-2266
mfoley@ipsciences.edu

Share this email!

   

Institute for the Psychological Sciences | 2001 Jefferson Davis Hwy Suite 511 Arlington, VA 22202

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Fwd: Save the Date for "7 Stages of Marriage" Seminar


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Rita DeMaria, PhD <drrita@ritademaria.com>
Date: Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 8:36 AM
Subject: Save the Date for "7 Stages of Marriage" Seminar
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com


Having trouble viewing this email? Click here

SAVE THE DATE!
 
Saturday, September 12, 2015
Seminar: "7 Stages of Marriage"


This 3-hour seminar will provide a practical timeline for understanding the dimensions and stages of marriage and how love evolves through time in healthy relationships. The Stages of Marriage Questionnaire (SMQ) will be introduced as well as the survey findings from 1,000 couples. Participants will be able to apply learning to relationship education, couples therapy, and marriage enrichment that strengthens communication, passion, and friendship. Each stage has a set of tasks that help couples develop a committed, loving, and understanding relationship. This seminar will include presentations and group discussion as well as individual and small group work.

CEUs
3.0 PCB Approved Education Credits

3.0 Continuing Education Credits for Licensed Social Workers, Licensed Professional Counselors, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapists. This is NOT an approved CE for Psychologists.
LOCATION
 Penn Foundation
Loux Healthcare Center
Univest Community Room
807 Lawn Avenue
  
Sellersville, PA 18960
 
TIME
8:30 - 9:00 AM  
 Registration and Continental Breakfast

9:00 AM- 12:00 PM 
Presentation
 

Upcoming Programs
Couples Communication Essentials  - Individuals and couples welcome.

The Couples Communication Essentials class is a research-based approach to teaching couples (premarital, committed, or married) how to communicate effectively, manage conflicts without damaging closeness, and how to preserve and enhance commitment, friendship and intimacy. The premise is that it's not how much you love each other that makes a relationship or marriage work; it's how you resolve differences and preserve fun and sensuality that keeps a relationship strong. This one-day course uses teaching, videos, role-plays, group discussions and private coaching to educate couples in an atmosphere of informality and comfort. Participants will learn how to:

  • communicate effectively
  • manage conflicts
  • preserve and enhance commitment, friendship and intimacy
Part 1: The Basics
Saturday, August 29, 9:30am - 4pm
at Council for Relationships' University City Office - Register online today!

Part 2: Resolving Differences
Saturday, September 19, 9:30am - 4pm
at Council for Relationships' University City Office - Register online today!

Fwd: Mobile outreach to expecting/new dads: Your input requested


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Emily Cramer <emcramer@noctrl.edu>
Date: Wed, Jul 15, 2015 at 3:39 PM
Subject: Mobile outreach to expecting/new dads: Your input requested
To: FRPN@list.frpn.org


Dear FRPN Listserv Member,

We are requesting your consultation and advice as we prepare to initiate a community-based mobile outreach program for expecting and new fathers. With support from Text4Baby, a national text-messaging service for expecting/new moms, and through start-up funding from North Central College (Naperville IL), we are taking preliminary steps to developing a corpus of text messages for fathers and then to test the messages with a sample of fathers from the Chicagoland area.

Here’s where we’d appreciate your help: we are contacting you to gauge your interest in reviewing the messages we develop and partnering with us to initiate the program. The messages contain advice and suggestions, grounded in evidence-based research, for dads to consider before and after baby is born. While we are familiar with research on father involvement, we believe the most valuable consultation comes from those who are connecting with dads on a daily basis. 

We are near completion in developing a corpus of 50+ evidence-based text messages geared towards dads preparing for baby or caring for baby after birth. Upon completion, we would like to be able to send the draft of messages to you for your review. Your thoughts about content to add, edit, or remove would be so helpful as we prepare for the next step of our project: to recruit and send messages to fathers in the community. 

The project is guided by principles of community-based participatory research. We value your partnership: If you are interested in collaborating with us on the project, please let us know by responding to this e-mail. 

If you’d prefer to talk through the project to a greater extent, we would love to set up a phone conversation or face-to-face meeting. The principal investigator can be reached at (630) 637-5380 or emcramer@noctrl.edu. More information, including a project narrative and sample text messages, can be viewed at www.text4dads.org

Regards and With Appreciation,
Emily M. Cramer, PhD, Principal Investigator, North Central College
Alexis Marsh ’16, Student Investigator, North Central College



This email list is intended to facilitate a discussion between fatherhood researchers and practitioners on topics related to evaluation research.
To post to this listserve, e-mail: frpn@list.frpn.org.
To subscribe to this list, visit: www.frpn.org/list-serve.
If you have questions or comments about the list or the FRPN, email rebecca.kaufman@temple.edu or call (215) 204-5706.
To unsubscribe from the FRPN list, click the following link:
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Fwd: To minimize divorce risk, don't marry too young—or old (and more Family Studies articles)

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Institute for Family Studies" <editor@family-studies.org>
Date: Jul 16, 2015 2:08 PM
Subject: To minimize divorce risk, don't marry too young—or old (and more Family Studies articles)
To: "Bill" <billcoffin68@gmail.com>
Cc:

View this email in your browser.

This Week on Family-Studies.org

Sociologist Nicholas Wolfinger showed that the link between age at first marriage and divorce risk has changed in recent years, and marital therapist Steven Harris explained how a recent NBA contract dispute resembles an unhappy marriage. David Lapp questioned whether working-class young people even want much-lamented factory jobs to come back. Finally, Anna Sutherland documented how parents are supporting their adult children these days.

The Right Age to Marry

by Nicholas H. Wolfinger

If you hope to avoid divorce, what’s the ideal age to get married? For years, it seemed like the longer you waited to marry, the better. But now, the best time is the late 20s or early 30s.

Not Everyone Wants Factory Jobs

by David Lapp

We hear a lot about how the loss of factory jobs hurt the working class. But many young people in that demographic have tried working in factories—and don’t want to go back.

Court-ship and Marriage

by Steven M. Harris

Why the NBA contract drama involving DeAndre Jordan and Mark Cuban reminds one marital therapist of struggling couples on the brink of divorce.

IFS Around the Web

Jordan Weissmann reported on Nicholas Wolfinger’s  findings about age at marriage and divorce risk at Slate. He terms the new trend “the Goldilocks theory of marriage: Getting married too early is risky, but so is getting married too late.”

After the Demographic Dividend

by Anna Sutherland

In the right circumstances, falling fertility rates can spur economic growth. But in some nations they fall too far, which only creates new challenges. [From the archives]

Supporting Adult Children

by Anna Sutherland

These days, many parents provide financial and other forms of support to their sons and daughters well after they turn 18. But is their well-intended help doing more harm than good?
View more Family-Studies blog posts.
Copyright © 2015 Institute for Family Studies, All rights reserved.
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Fwd: Teaching Empathy: No better time than now

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Romina Laouri <updates@ashokanews.org>
Date: Wed, Jul 15, 2015 at 1:23 PM
Subject: Teaching Empathy: No better time than now
To: "billcoffin68@gmail.com" <billcoffin68@gmail.com>


                 

Hi Bill,


We are excited to share that we have launched a new blog series, Changemaker Education, where our global network of educators will share their insights about teaching and practicing empathy! By partnering with Medium, we hope to facilitate a more inclusive conversation around our vision for change: that every child must master empathy.


This newsletter is dedicated to exploring the role of empathy in stemming violence. In light of recent tragic incidences of violence and hate in the news, we are working extra hard to include all educators, parents, and other influencers in the conversation around empathy.


We hope you enjoy the articles below! Please feel free to send feedback by replying to this newsletter. Also, if you would like to write for our Changemaker Education blog or become an Ashoka Empathy Ambassador, please reach out to us!



Best,

Romina Laouri

Changemaker Schools

Ashoka's Start Empathy Initiative

Charleston: A life lesson on bringing empathy to the forefront


Ashoka Empathy Ambassador Patrick Riccards shares his story of how he learned about empathy, equity, and community as a child, and how he is now teaching his children the same lessons in the wake of the horrific actions against Emanuel AME Church. "It is my hope that [my children] will speak of how far we have come in two decades to tear down the walls and silos of difference in pursuit of identifying the similarities that define us." Read the full article here on our Changemaker Education blog.

Stemming the tide towards violence: What is an educator's responsibility in troubled times?


As head of High Meadow School, Michelle Rosenfeld Hughes, writes: "there is no better time for educators around the world to collectively reflect on how education can stem the tide of young people towards mass violence and extremism and towards civic engagement and problem-solving." Hughes continues to share what she believes are the essential components of socio-emotional development that support the growth of civic behaviors. Read the full article here.

Why the world would be better if we acted more like toddlers


In teaching children empathy, we are also learning how to be empathic individuals ourselves. Ashoka Empathy Ambassador and passionate creator of safe spaces for children, Jen Cort, shares of 12 ways she has observed toddlers demonstrating empathy, in hopes that we learn how to exercise these same practices especially in the face of tragedies. Read the full article here on our Changemaker Education blog.

In the News:


Empathy Is Actually A Choice

By Daryl Cameron, Michael Inzlicht and William A. Cunningham

Featured in The New York Times on July 10


What If Everything You Knew About Disciplining Kids Was Wrong?

By Katherine Reynolds Lewis

Featured in Mother Jones in July/August Issue

On Social Media:


Educators know that it's a challenge to discipline kids in a #restorative way. Perhaps #deeperlearning can help: http://ow.ly/NJBoz

Posted by @StartEmpathy on June 23


Social-Emotional learning is crucial 4 supporting future generations, and discovering the next gen of #changemakers. http://ow.ly/NJKRm

Posted by @StartEmpathy on June 23



This email was sent by Ashoka

1700 N Moore, Arlington, VA 22209

Fwd: Re-Watch Our Recent Webinar on Marriage


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: uCatholic Webinar <info@ucatholic.com>
Date: Thu, Jul 9, 2015 at 1:44 PM
Subject: Re-Watch Our Recent Webinar on Marriage
To: Bill <billcoffin68@gmail.com>


Take Advantage of These Special Offers from our Co-Sponsors!






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Fwd:Fathers' Involvement in Healthcare Study


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Rebecca Kaufman <tue45053@temple.edu>
Date: Tue, Jul 7, 2015 at 11:02 AM
Subject:
To: FRPN@list.frpn.org


To members of the FRPN List-Serve:

 

My name is Craig Garfield and I am a pediatrician and father involvement researcher at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine and Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago.

 

I am inviting all fathers of children between the ages of 3 to 5 (or organizations that work with fathers) to participate in a survey on father involvement in child healthcare.  Our goal is to better understand how today’s fathers are involved in the health of their children.

 

The purpose of the Northwestern IRB-approved, Fathers' Involvement in Healthcare Study (IRB: STU00200222) is to develop a quantitative, self-report measure of father involvement in toddler health. Fathers will be asked to complete a set of questionnaire items online that assess their direct involvement in toddler health.

 

Participants will be asked to:

  • Complete a 5-10 minute online survey
  • Participate in a 30-40 minute phone interview at thier convenience.
  •  All eligible fathers who complete both tasks will receive a $20 Amazon gift card.

If you would like to participate, follow this link to our study website: Fatherinvolvement.weebly.com

 

Please forward this link to your network of fathers who may be interested. I have also attached our study flyer.

 

The final goal is to develop a new survey that can be used to measure how diverse fathers care for their children's health. Your participation in the survey is essential to support and improve father involvement efforts.

 

For more information, please contact me at (312) 503-5463 or email me at c-garfield@northwestern.edu

 

Sincerely,


Craig

Craig Garfield, MD, MAPP

Associate Professor

Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine

Departments of Pediatrics and Medical Social Sciences

And

Director of Research, Division of Hospital Based Medicince

Co-Director, Pediatric Hospital Medicine Fellowship

Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago

Chicago, IL





This email list is intended to facilitate a discussion between fatherhood researchers and practitioners on topics related to evaluation research.
To post to this listserve, e-mail: frpn@list.frpn.org.
To subscribe to this list, visit: www.frpn.org/list-serve.
If you have questions or comments about the list or the FRPN, email rebecca.kaufman@temple.edu or call (215) 204-5706.
To unsubscribe from the FRPN list, click the following link:
http://list.frpn.org/scripts/wa-FRPN.exe?SUBED1=FRPN&A=1